Hi all,
First of all, thank you for reading this post. My question is whether or not doing paralegal would provide any clues to determining whether the field is "right" for you + any advantages for applying to law schools.
1) After graduating from undergrad, I've met some people who have worked as paralegals and consequently stopped pursuing legal career altogether because they found that it was "not for them." Are what paralegals experience/see from law firms really representative of the day-to-day lives of lawyers? If so, as far as your personal experiences goes, how much worse (more stressful) do you think the lives of paralegals/lawyers are than those of others'?
2) I have another friend, who just recently got a job as a paralegal. He told me the pay was decent and he said some firms provide LSAT classes for paralegals in addition to other resources that may assist them in applying to law schools (don't know the details...). Can working at law firms really give your application a boost, all things being equal?
3) Simply put, is doing paralegal before law school worth the time (I heard it was usually two-year contract)?
Thank you in advance, and good luck in your studies.
JSK
Comments
My two cents: It either won't matter, or it could hurt. The lower ranked schools only care about your grades and LSAT. They're worried about going out of business and since ranking affects their enrollment #s, and thus their cash inflow, they do everything they can to get the best they can get.
Higher ranked schools can afford to be more picky and while I think working as a paralegal may show readers that you're committed to the field, I don't think it would be a deciding factor between you and another equally qualified candidate.
I think you'd be better served by continuing to work in a field you know you love. Give it everything you've got. Look for areas of your field that might benefit from your existing skills, and the skills you'd gain as a lawyer. That's your essay right there.
As for using a PL position to determine whether you want to be a lawyer or not... I wouldn't go down that rabbit hole. With the current legal employment market, if you're not sure you want to be a lawyer, you probably shouldn't train to become one. Exposure to the field is fine, but exposure to a related field could poison your view. Looking in from the outside isn't likely to give you an accurate impression of the lives lawyers live, the work they do, how they feel about it, or whether they really think it's worth it. Instead, you're more likely to see a façade, good or bad, that isn't really representative.
I think you're better off talking to as many lawyers as you can personally, outside the office, to get the feel for it and continuing in your current field until you're sure. I wouldn't do anything to "enhance" your resume. It'll look like that, and that's not likely to help. Just keep working hard and studying hard. If it's meant to be, it's meant to be.
J
So while I agree that you shouldn't do it for your resume, and it definitely won't get you substantive experience with the work that they do, I think it's actually a fantastic way to get to know the lives of the lawyers you work with. It's easy to go to a cocktail hour full of 1Ls and wax poetic about how it's hard sometimes but nothing happens without some hard work; it's not so easy to send the latest version of whatever you're working on to the paralegal's desk at 11:30pm on a Saturday night and act like either of you is happy to be there.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Mind if I ask why you were considering going back? Presumably you left for a reason. Did you recently miss it or were there other considerations involved in your temptation?
Why am I here you ask? I'm in denial just like most others here.
After a year of seeing the work that they do I began to be interested in it. I think seeing them work day-to-day really gave me a sense of what their lives were like, and what mine would be like, if I pursued it. I also asked them what aspects of their job they liked and what they didn't.
To answer your first point, yes, you definitely see what it's like to be a lawyer and what it's like to be in the legal environment. I've met a lot of people who decided that law school was not for them after starting to work at the law firm, which is great because you don't want to be one of those people who go to law school, spend 3 years studying, go into 250K debt, come out, and absolutely hate their job.
As for an application boost, I can't see it hurting your application in any way. Depending on the type of work you do as a paralegal, it may definitely help your application. For instance, in the criminal defense firm, I used to draft motions, notices and do tasks that was regarded as an attorney work. Also, there are law schools who specifically prefer students with work experience - take Northwestern.
With all of that said, I do believe there is a downside. I think a lot of people who go to law school go with this dream of working in biglaw, making that 160K salary and imagine that once law school is over, they will be set for life and be happy and etc... That idea becomes a motivation to do well. In my case, I know what it's like to work in biglaw and I know what it's like to work in a small law firm environment and I feel like that motivation is not really going to be there.
It really depends. I'm glad I worked as a paralegal after undergrad at a small law firm because it taught me so much about the practice of law and how an attorney goes about their day-to-day life. It's not always pretty but you just have to make the best out of it. & basically don't go into anything just because of the money.